Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on TCP/IP and OSI Protocols. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 11 page paper addressing various aspects of TCP/IP, including a list of various application protocols (DNS, DHCP, FTP, HTTP and LDAP); firewalls and proxies; Microsoft troubleshooting utilities; and peer-to-peer networks. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
11 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSitTCP-IPosi.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
business hinges on the proper function of organizations networks. There are relatively few "rules" in network design, aside from those prescribing where specific hardware items should be on the
network. The result of this lack of rules is that there is no standardization of form among networks. The paradox of networks is that they must conform to
certain standards of design. The Network Definition Networking is "the electronic linking of geographically dispersed devices" (Martin, Brown, DeHayes, Hoffer and Perkins, 2002;
p. 100), and involves the movement of information over and through the network. "There are four primary reasons for networking" (Martin, et al., 2002; p. 99): (1) sharing
of technology resources; (2) sharing of data; (3) distributed data processing and client/server systems; and (4) enhanced communications. Network Protocols TCP/IP Now an
"old" technology, Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) has been in use for more than 20 years and keeps being relevant to changing environments, usually just when it has been counted
as a protocol that likely will not survive the next generation of technological advances. The truth is that even though applications, hardware and possible speeds of transmission all have
increased in capabilities and reliability, the actual mode of transmission of data across the systems largely is accomplished in same manner now as when networking was new.
TCP/IP works under the same principles in Internet applications as it did before the existence of the Internet, which is to facilitate data transmission by "breaking
the information into smaller packets" (Venter and Eloff, 1998; p. 683), and in fact has become one of the most important of the Internet technologies today (Martin, et al., 2002).
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